<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>

<head>
	<meta charset="utf-8">
	<title>ios webkit-overflow-scrolling</title>
	<style>
		body {
			display: flex;
			flex-direction: column;
			margin: 0;
			padding: 0;
		}

		.box {
			width: 100vw;
			height: 50vh;
			margin: 0;
			padding: 0;
			font-size: 5vw;
			line-height: 8vw;
			overflow-y: scroll;
		}

		.touch {
			-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
		}
	</style>
</head>
<div class="box">
	<h3>not touch</h3>
	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.
	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.
	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.
</div>

<div class="box touch">
	<h3> touch</h3>
	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.
	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

	Web pages on iOS by default have a "momentum" style scrolling where a flick of the finger sends the web page
	scrolling and it keeps going until eventually slowing down and stopping as if friction is slowing it down. Like if
	you were to push a hockey puck across the ice or something. You might think that any element with scrolling would
	have this behavior as well, but it doesn't. You can add it back with a special property.

</div>

</html>